The World Beyond

Georgia Tech Researchers Awarded Total of $4.35 Million in 2020 for Direct Air Capture Projects

Researchers in Georgia Tech’s School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering are principal investigators on six new projects that have been awarded a total of $4.35 million for studies related to direct air capture science and technology. Direct Air Capture is a technology that removes carbon dioxide directly from ambient air for use as a feedstock for chemical processes or transformed into a durable substance so that it can be sequestered.

Georgia Tech Team Awarded NSF Partnerships for Innovation Grant to Change the Game for the Afterlife of Wind Turbine Blades 

Wind turbines are designed to provide green solutions for the production of power. Wind turbines produce zero carbon emissions; however, the blades themselves pose an environmental challenge as they depreciate. To address this concern, the Georgia Institute of Technology, in partnership with Logisticus Group, was awarded the U.S. National Science Foundation Partnerships for Innovation grant.

Birth of Life and an Alternative Theory to the ‘RNA World’ Hypothesis Has Unselfish Molecules Giving Rise to the Elements of Life: Great New Research From the Center for Chemical Evolution. 

It’s a question older than science: How did life begin? In modern biology, life depends on life to live. But how did the mutualistic relationship between different molecules – which led, eventually, to complex biological systems, like human beings, for example – actually come to be?

What’s Creating Galaxy-Spanning Cold Gas Filaments in Galaxy Clusters? Research Points to Burps From Supermassive Black Holes (Astrophys) 

A galaxy’s size can be enough to stagger the imagination. Now try to imagine galaxy clusters, the largest gravitationally bound structures in the universe, dotted with hundreds to thousands of galaxies and permeated by large amounts of hot, X-ray emitting plasma.